The Art of Sisters: Tales & Letters by the Brontës

Reviews

"Thurman is handsome, imposing, brash, boyish and believably incarnates a young man torn between achieving the quick success of the digital agewith a secret longing for a more idealistic approach"- Broadway World, Sex with Strangers

"It’s in Buckingham, portrayed in an acute balancing act by Thurman,that we find the most pointed object lesson in the dangers of trustingan insecure narcissist" - The Portland Phoenix, Richard III

"Thurman delivers cocky sex appeal with underlying desires that are much deeper than his handsome looks"- Portland Press Herald. Sex with Strangers

"Tony’s intensity is amplified by the smartly lower-pitched work of the characters he plays around and against... Thurman’s Max, in turn,has an American’s informality on its best behavior among Brits,and the alert self-restraint of a man in the home of his mistress’s husband"- The Portland Phoenix, Dial M for Murder

"Thurman’s Ethan moves, talks, and multi-taskswith the focused speed of high-functioning internetHe holds his mouth, and his body, like tools he’s confident he knows how to use. . .Thurman makes convincing his insecurity, his youth,and his raw anxiety to be taken seriously as a writer"- Portland Phoenix, Sex with Strangers

"Thurman’s Spike is exactly what he should be –hard-bodied, charmingly cheeky, happily shallow(and his remarkable reverse-stripteasemight make you think he’s done it before)"- Portland Phoenix, Vanya and Sonia...

"Marshall Taylor Thurman was solid as both the peculiar Dr. Mortimerand sinister Stapleton"- OnstageBlog, Hound of the Baskervilles